I am not saying that apnea cannot happen with cup feeding. However, I
believe we need to be carerful about suggesting that apnea will
frquently/nearly always? happen with cup feeding. This method of feeding
when baby cannot be at breast is used routinely in many parts of the world
where bottle-feeding is too expensive and too dangerous (insufficient
cleaning opprotunities availalbe). When I have seen this done by
experienced midwives in these settings, they never mentioned apneic babies,
nor did the babies look anything but bright-eyed and quite interested in
this mode of feeding, which usually was used before baby could go to breast
(we we are talking about small babies, premies and SGAs).
"We are all faced with a series of great opportunities brilliantly
disguised as impossible situations."
Kathleen G. Auerbach,PhD, IBCLC (Ferndale, WA USA) [log in to unmask]
WEB PAGE: http://www.telcomplus.com/~kga/lactation.html
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